Wednesday, December 12, 2018

More concern for the divine economy


WHILE it’s true that we have to give due, if not utmost,
attention to our human economy in its different levels—local,
national, global—it’s even more true that we have to give a most
special attention to the divine economy or the economy of salvation.
We have to be more familiar with how this divine economy works.
  
            This is not to pit the human economy against the divine
economy, or vice versa, since both economies mutually affect each
other. It is just a matter of the priority we ought to give to the
spiritual and supernatural dimension of our life over the material and
temporal character of our life, and to God’s will and ways over our
own ways, since God is the Alpha and Omega of all things, and we just
have to cooperate with him.
  
            Obviously, our human economy can already demand a lot from
us. It’s no laughing matter at all. While the government and the
official economic planners and agents in all levels of our social life
take the lead, the ideal is that everyone somehow should be involved
in making the economy really serve the common good of all.
  
            The ideal to reach is to have a highly participative
economy where everyone contributes to the working of the economy and
enjoys its fruits. As much as possible, no one should be marginalized,
much less, ostracized, regardless of the class one may belong to.
  
            The divine economy, which is all about the management of
God’s creation and especially of us, the leading creatures of all his
creation, demands a lot more than what the human economy can demand
from us. This divine economy is meant to achieve the salvation of all
humanity.
  
            Yes, it’s true that God takes the lead in seeing to it
that this divine economy succeeds in its purpose, but we also have a
big and indispensable part to play in it. Of course, everything
depends on God, but in some mysterious ways, everything also depends
on us. That’s because as image and likeness of God, as children of
his, we cannot help but get involved in this divine economy the way
God is involved in it.
  
            As such we have to be open to the divine ways that this
divine economy works, and in fact, we should try our best to cooperate
in these divine ways as best as we can. And what are these divine ways
and means that God employs for the salvation of all mankind?
  
            They are nothing other than that, like what Christ
underwent, we should be willing to suffer and die for all the sins of
men. Yes, like Christ, we have to clarify the truth about God and us
and the world in general. We have to do a lot of good like what Christ
did abundantly. But in the end, it is the willingness to suffer and
die for all the sins of men that completes and perfects everything in
the mission of the salvation of mankind.
  
            We, therefore, should not be surprised if we are made to
suffer even if we think that we have been behaving well and therefore
not deserving to suffer. In this case, we would be like Christ who is
made to suffer for the sins of all men. This is how the divine economy
works. This is how the economy of salvation reaches its goal.
  
            We, therefore, should not complain when we are made to
suffer. In fact, the contrary should be true. We have to welcome
suffering. That way, we are contributing a lot to the economy of
salvation and for sure, we will also be enjoying the fruits of that
successful, prosperous economy of salvation.
   
            We need to broaden our perspective, so we can more
actively participate in the working of the divine economy.


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